It has been revealed that many of these food outlets will be appropriate for office workers, and the City Center group of investors has been thinking about developing six buildings, according to the Morning Call.
The emphasis has been placed on the provision of affordable food. The new businesses may wish to use Stationery printing in Warminster when they begin to operate.
Renovations have been scheduled to begin on one of the buildings in question in early summer. Although names of the restaurants set to open have not been revealed, City Center has already ruled out expensive eateries. This is reportedly because the organization is keen for local businesses to deliver the kind of food that young people can afford to consume on a regular basis.
J.B. Reilly, the chief executive of City Center, told The Morning Call:
"The retailers we've been talking with really wanted to see the office and residential in place before they would commit. Now that it's happened, the time is right.”
Allentown Neighborhood Improvement Zone Development Authority (ANIZDA) has been supportive of the latest initiative from City Center. The chairperson of ANIZDA, Sy Traub, was so keen on the last proposal that he apparently wished to debate it quickly in order to eat in a restaurant promptly. Get a Free Quote for Stationery